Indigenous burning practices will return to coastal Southern California this fall, when members from multiple bands of the Chumash conduct a one-day burn at UCSB’s North Campus Open Space in September, a time of year when cultural burns were traditionally practiced.

The event will take place in conjunction with Santa Barbara County Fire and UCSB’s Cheadle Center for Biodiversity and Ecological Restoration.

After a 230-year hiatus, the burn is designed to restore traditional practices that enhance the biodiversity of native grasslands and reduce the risk of unintentional fire by reducing dried thatch.

It also is intended to help the community reconnect to the land, plants and wildlife by learning about the history of indigenous burning and the value of burning as a land management tool in the face of climate change.

About 14 acres of restored native perennial grassland will be burned on a permissive burn day. The burn will be ignited in several small plots, each of which could burn for 20-30 minutes.

Staff at the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) have reviewed the Smoke Management Plan and provided conditions to minimize smoke impacts. The burn will be conducted under the most favorable meteorological conditions to direct smoke away from population centers.

The Chumash and other indigenous Californians used fire regularly as a tool to manage vegetation across the state for many thousands of years, until the Spanish governor banned the practice in 1793.

In addition to the cultural relationship the Chumash have with burning, fire was also used to achieve diverse goals in different landscapes. Burning increases the germination and growth of culturally important plants and animals and reduces the build-up of dry fuels.

The practice also enhances access to plant and animal resources such as redmaids, chia, edible bulbs, insects, small mammals, and woody stems useful for constructing nets, baskets and animals’ homes.

Cheadle Center staff have planted native bulbs and wildflowers at the North Campus Open Space following the seeding of native purple needle grass in 2017 and 2018.

These culturally important, beautiful and diverse species will be better able to grow through bringing back the practice of regular, light fires managed in conjunction with those whose ancestors managed the land successfully for thousands of years.

Mowing can reduce the buildup of dried thatch, but a light cultural burn has the potential to eliminate the thatch from invasive grasses, trigger growth by the native bunch grasses, stimulate germination of the native wildflowers, and, most importantly, provide an opportunity for local Chumash representatives to re-ignite these practices on the Santa Barbara coast.

There is a spiritual component of burning related to relationships with the place and with each other. There is also a cleansing component to these practices.

The burning process can build relationships between people and the land, and this return of cultural fire can be a tool for uniting us in growing our relationships to the land.

The descriptions of California’s diversity, bounty, and the ease of travel through open woodlands by the first western explorers provides testimony to the value of this and other indigenous land and plant management practices.

The uncontrolled wildfires, spread of invasive plants, and exacerbating effects of climate change are current challenges, which are said to be due, in part, to eliminating traditional burning practices more than 230 years ago.

This burn is planned and coordinated by the APCDs of Santa Barbara County, San Luis Obispo County, San Joaquin Valley and Ventura County, and the California Air Resources Board to minimize impacts on air quality on surrounding communities.

The burn depends on weather and air quality conditions favorable to smoke dispersion. If the conditions are not within prescription, the burn will be rescheduled.

Community members who smell smoke should take precautions and use common sense to reduce any harmful health effects by limiting outdoor activities. Residents should avoid strenuous outdoor activity and remain indoors as much as possible if the smell of smoke is detected or if smoke is visible.

These precautions are especially important for children, older adults, and those with heart and lung conditions. Individuals who are sensitive to smoke should consider temporarily relocating and closing all doors and windows on the day of the burn.

Symptoms of smoke exposure can include coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, chest tightness or pain, nausea and unusual fatigue or light-headedness.

For more about the county’s air quality, visit www.OurAir.org.

To view a statewide prescribed burn map and other features, visit the Prescribed Fire Information Reporting System website.